by Jonathan Turley, USATODAY

by Jonathan Turley, USATODAY

Christmas and the New Year come but once a year. It is the lament of many a child ... and not a few lawyers. These two holidays seem designed for personal injury lawyers, thanks to homes filled with combustible trees, poor wiring, acrobatic decoration hangings, overconsumption of alcohol and overpacked vehicles traveling long distances.

Despite teaching torts, I have been the poster boy of the most common holiday hazards, though some statistics show I have plenty of company.

For example, those house decorations are a virtual siren's call for slip-and-fall lawyers. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission estimated that 15,000 people were injured during last year's November and December in holiday decorating mishaps. Some 34% of those accidents were from falls, while lacerations made up 11% and back strains made up 10%.

Personal experience

I have had them all: falls, back injuries, cuts and shocks. A couple years ago, I inflated a 7-foot penguin on top of my house only to learn that there was not enough room for me and "Pengy." As I was slowly pushed to the edge, I hanged on to the penguin for dear life while trying desperately to pull his plug.

This year, I succeeded in shocking myself on a string of outdoor Christmas lights with an exposed wire - bouncing me off a ladder into a prickly holly tree.

While Christmas trees are another common source for accidents, the greatest fire danger are not the trees but candles. From 2009 through 2011, hundreds of fires and 70 deaths were attributed to candles - seven times the number attributed to trees.

Then there is the infamous fruitcake - with some in re-gifted circulation since the Christmas Truce of 1914. Just this month, the annual fruitcake eating contest in Santa Claus, Ind., was rocked by scandal after the winner was dethroned for hiding half an uneaten fruitcake under a napkin.

Finally, Antoinette Basso actually had a drunken Santa fall on top of her on a Chicago street - leading to a negligence lawsuit a few years ago.

Highway havoc

Like generals preparing to fight the last war, we tend to work to avoid last year's holiday disaster and miss the ones developing in front of us.

For example, after prior luggage disasters, I purchased a top-of-the-line roof carrier. I then overstuffed the carrier, which proceeded to burst open in the middle of the night on a two-lane highway. All the wrapped presents hidden in the carrier were then deposited across the highway in full view of the children, and most of the packages were ground into holiday chum by 18-wheelers moving at 90 miles an hour. I found a pair of socks in the dark before we continued to Chicago.

Then there are the gifts themselves, such as the "Elmo Knows Your Name" doll that one couple bought for their son James. The doll freaked out the kid by repeatedly saying, "Kill James."

I faced a different problem one year when I stuffed the toys for the four children into my carrier (now secured by about a dozen bungee cords). The problem was the toy "Talking Grill" wouldn't stop talking. By Toledo, the battery loss produced a low level moaning that spooked the children for 12 hours while they sat in the dark. They listened to this voice through Indiana, Ohio and most of Pennsylvania before it finally died on the top of the car - leaving the kids staring blankly forward like shell-shock victims.

Sobering statistics

New Year's Eve offers hazards of a different kind for torts and crimes. The most obvious is drunken driving, though you might be surprised by the actual statistics. It is Christmas, not New Year's Eve, that produces the greatest number of auto accidents.

A study at the University of Alabama found that the six days around Christmas produced 18% more accidents than Thanksgiving weekend (which has the highest level of driving) and 27% more than around New Year's Day.

One of the greatest dangers is actually found in that symbol of the New Year: champagne. The American Academy of Ophthalmology has launched a campaign to reduce the number of people who put their eyes out with champagne corks.

So I wish everyone a torts-free holiday, but just in case, keep your lawyer on speed dial.

Jonathan Turley, the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University, is a member of USA TODAY's Board of Contributors.